This page covers one angle of odostrada. For the full product overview, pricing, and FAQs, start at the main odostrada page. Go to the main site.
For Self-Employed Work
An IRS Mileage Log App Built for Self-Employed Work
If you are a contractor, freelancer, consultant, delivery driver, or sole proprietor, your mileage log should help you document deductions without turning into another job.
What you actually need
Most self-employed workers do not need a surveillance map of every stop they made. They need a reliable record of when they drove, how far they drove, where the trip was tied to, and what business purpose it served.
odostrada is designed around that goal. It uses odometer anchors to calculate trip distance and lets you classify trips without the overhead of all-day tracking, which makes it a more deliberate mileage log app without route tracking.
Why this workflow works
Open the app, capture or enter the odometer, verify the trip, and save. The app can remember your own places and purposes to make that step faster next time.
That gives you a system you can actually stick with, which matters more than a long feature list if your real goal is deductible mileage you can defend later. If you think in terms of an odometer mileage tracker instead of an always-on route tracker, the workflow makes more sense immediately.
Made for records, not just routes
- Capture date, distance, location context, and business purpose in a format that supports real bookkeeping and a defensible IRS mileage log.
- Keep personal and business mileage clearly separated.
- Use exports for reporting and backups for actual recovery and device transfer.
- Stay local-first so your trip history does not need to live on somebody else’s server.
A better mileage log is one you will still use in six months
odostrada is built to be fast enough for daily use and structured enough for serious recordkeeping.
Android now has a native Google Play app. iPhone users should use odostrada in Safari for the best available setup.